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Psalms 90

Old & New Testament Restoration CommentaryRestoration Commentary

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Verses 1-6

Psa 90:1-6

BOOK IV

INTRODUCTION FOR BOOK IV

There are seventeen psalms in this book, classified by Dummelow as:

Penitential Psalms, Psalms 90; Psalms 91; Psalms 94; and Psalms 101.

Psalms of Thanksgiving, Psalms 92; Psalms 93; Psalms 95-100; and Psalms 103-106,

National Psalms, Psalms 94; Psalms 97; Psalms 99; Psalms 102; Psalms 105; and Psalms 106.

Historical Psalms, Psalms 105 and Psalms 106.

A Gnomic Psalm, Psalms 101.

Dummelow’s last classification, Gnomic, means, "expressing maxims, or universal truths." Of course, there is overlapping in such a classification, several elements often appearing in the same psalm.

Significantly, the Septuagint (LXX) classifies no less than eleven of these psalms as Davidic: Psalms 91; Psalms 93-99; Psalms 101; Psalms 103 and Psalms 104. The superscriptions in our version also assign Psalms 101 and Psalms 103 to David.

Some scholars are unwilling to allow that Moses is the author of Psalms 90, as indicated in the superscription, but no good reason whatever has ever been advanced for denying it. Furthermore, "Rabbinic tradition assigns the ten following Psalms, Psalms 91-100, to Moses.” Other Psalms written by Moses are also found in Exodus 15, and in Deuteronomy 32.

Psalms 90

FROM EVERLASTING TO EVERLASTING THOU ART GOD (Psalms 90:2)

As noted above, this Psalm is ascribed to Moses in the superscription; and one objection cited by scholars against this is Psalms 90:10 which declares man’s life-span to be "Three-score and ten years ... or even four-score years." That statement is alleged to disqualify Moses as the author, because he lived to be 120 years of age, and his brother Aaron likewise lived well past a hundred.

That objection is worthless, because Moses indeed, as was Aaron, was especially blessed of God for the purpose of God’s achieving the exodus of his people from Egypt and bringing them to the borders of Canaan. Not only did Moses reach that advanced age, but his eyesight had not failed, nor was his strength abated.

Also, that foolish objection ignores the fact that all of the Israelites who were above 20 years of age at the Red Sea Crossing died during the subsequent forty years, Caleb and Joshua, of course, being the only two exceptions.

Furthermore, the words here may be viewed as a prophecy of how man’s life-span would be restricted in the ages to come. Is it true? Indeed yes. The fact is that a very small percentage of mankind enjoys a life-span any longer than that laid down here. In view of all this, we reject this objection to Moses’ authorship.

One other very feeble and incompetent objection is founded upon Psalms 90:1, in which the author glances back upon many generations of God’s blessings, the critical allegation being that Moses belonged to the "first generation" of the chosen people and could not have claimed God’s blessings for "all generations." This objection is founded on the error that supposes the generation of the exodus to have been the "first generation" of the chosen people. God chose Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; and the "chosen people" had already been under God’s loving protection for almost half a millennium in the days of Moses. As Delitzsch said, "Such trifling points as this dwindle down to nothing.”

We shall conclude this study of the Mosaic authorship of Psalms 90 with this paragraph from Delitzsch.

"There is scarcely any written memorial of antiquity which so brilliantly justifies the tradition concerning its origin as does this Psalm ... Not alone with respect to its contents, but also with reference to its form and language, it is perfectly suitable to Moses. Even Hitzig could bring nothing of importance against this view.”

A Prayer of Moses the Man of God (Superscription). Three times this title is awarded to Moses in the Scriptures: Deuteronomy 33:1; Joshua 14:6; and Ezra 3:2.

Based upon Psalms 90:7-12, McCaw concluded that, "The definite historical background of the Psalm is the latter months of the wilderness wanderings (Numbers 21:14-23).”

Despite the psalm being labeled "A Prayer of Moses," it is a prayer only in the last six verses. The first six are a meditation.

Psalms 90:1-6

THE MEDITATION

"Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations.

Before the mountains were brought forth,

Or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world,

Even from everlasting to everlasting, thou art God.

Thou turnest man to destruction,

And sayest, Return ye children of men.

For a thousand years in thy sight

Are but as yesterday when it is past,

And as a watch in the night.

Thou carriest them away as with a flood; they are as a sleep:

In the morning they are like grass that groweth up.

In the morning it flourisheth, and groweth up;

In the evening it is cut down and withereth."

No more eloquent comment upon the wretched fate of the human race was ever made. God had warned Adam that, "In the day thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die." And, as the great lawgiver of Israel thought upon the dying generations of the human family, the Spirit of God spoke through Moses in these precious words. It must have been a sad experience indeed for Moses to watch an entire generation of the Chosen People die in the wilderness.

"Our dwelling place in all generations" (Psalms 90:1). This was true in two ways. In the nation of Israel itself, their faith in God dated back to the patriarchs. The years of Egyptian slavery had not destroyed their knowledge of the Lord. Even the mid-wives of Egypt knew enough about the God of the Hebrews that through fear of God they refused to follow strictly Pharaoh’s order to destroy all the male children. "The `God’ of this passage is `The Lord,’ the covenant God of the Hebrews; and "None can ignore those generations of faithful believers in the developing nation from the days of Abraham, all of whom made the Lord their dwelling place.”

It is true in another sense. From the beginning of Adam’s race, God has been the only security of the human family. The discerning souls of all generations found their only hope in God, the only exceptions being the "fools" who said in their hearts that, "There is no God" (Psalms 14:1).

An adaptation of these words was used by William Croft for the title of his famous chant (Called St. Anne), "Oh God, Our Help in Ages Past.” Kyle Yates made this the title of Psalms 90.

"From everlasting to everlasting, thou art God" (Psalms 90:2). The eternity of God, his prior existence as the First Cause, the God of Creation, the Maker and Sustainer of All Things is eloquently extolled and honored in this sentence, which we have chosen as an appropriate heading for this magnificent psalm.

"Return, ye children of men" (Psalms 90:3). "For dust thou art, and to the dust shalt thou return" (Genesis 3:19). Moses’ comment here is plainly a reference to this passage from Genesis.

"A thousand years ... as yesterday ... as a watch in the night" (Psalms 90:4). This contrasts the dying generations of mankind with the eternity of God. The Apostle Peter quoted this verse (2 Peter 3:8), warning Christians not to forget it, a warning which some have not heeded. Making "God’s days" to be 24 hours long is nothing but a human conceit, contrary to God’s specific word and its accompanying warning not to forget it.

It should be noted that "a thousand years" with God are also as a few hours (a watch in the night). It would be impossible to make it any plainer that God’s `days’ or God’s `years’ cannot be restricted to the limitations of the human understanding of those terms.

"Thou carriest them away as a flood ... as a sleep" (Psalms 90:5). Like the succeeding waves of the sea, the generations of men rise and fade away. As the hours pass away when one is asleep, the lives of men fly away (Psalms 90:10). This writer has read these beautiful words at funerals throughout a period of sixty-four years in the ministry of the gospel of Christ.

"Like grass ... in the morning it flourisheth ... in the evening ... withereth" (Psalms 90:5-6). This simile is also used repeatedly in the New Testament. Christ used it in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 6:30); James utilized it in James 1:10-11; and the Apostle Peter developed it in 1 Peter 1:24.

It would be difficult to imagine a simile more expressive of the fleeting, ephemeral nature of human life.

THE LAMENT

Some have referred to these verses as "a complaint," but to us, the word "lament" is better. We do not believe that Moses "complained" about God’s established order; but he certainly did grieve that it was the way it is.

E.M. Zerr:

General remarks. A considerable number of "authorities" say that this psalm was composed by Moses and was included in the collection of David’s writings. They do not seem to be very positive about it. Even as substantial a work as the Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia is willing only to say that it "is ascribed to Moses, and may be his." I offer these remarks in fairness to the readers who may take them for what they are worth. But regardless of whether David or Moses wrote this chapter, it was written by an inspired man and I shall comment on it as such and will notice the many and great truths therein which are of interest to all or should be.

Psalms 90:1. The original for dwelling place is defined "a retreat." The idea is of a place where one can be always safe and comfortable against the storms of life. Lord is from ADONAI and Strong’s definition is, "The Lord (used as a proper name of God only)." Since God means the "supreme Being" and has always existed, he would have been a safe retreat in all generations.

Psalms 90:2. The existence of the Creator prior to the work of creation is the thought in the beginning of this verse. The writer does not stop with that, but declares the divine existence to have been from everlasting to everlasting. Materialists and other critics of the Biblical doctrine of endless punishment make light of the idea that everlasting could mean endless. They ask how there could he two of them if one of them is endless. In this they expose their own shortsightedness as well as their ignorance of the subject in general. If the existence of God is endless (everlasting), it follows that His existence would be endless in both directions, or, front everlasting (past) to everlasting (future. The original for God in this place means strength or might. The sum of meaning of this verse is, therefore, that God has always existed and always will. That he is a Being of might and hence was able to create the mountains and everything that pertains to the earth.

Psalms 90:3. Destruction is from a word that means "to be crushed" in spirit; to be made contrite or penitent for one’s sins. That is why the rest of the verse shows that God calls for the penitent one to return to Him.

Psalms 90:4. God has always existed and always will. What we call "time" is only the measurement of part of that endless duration, measured by the movements of the heavenly bodies. Were it not for those movements we would not know any difference between a "day" and a "year." Since God is not limited by these movements, what we call a thousand years does not mean any more to God than what we call a day. That is the reason Peter said what he did in 2 Peter 3:8.

Psalms 90:5. The frailty and comparative shortness of man’s life is the general subject of this psalm. Of course, said frailty is made evident by the statements on the boundless might and existence of the Lord and God of all creation. The pronoun them, refers to man. There are three illustrations in this verse to show the weakness and brevity of man’s existence on the earth. He is as helpless as a feather would be in the path of a flood. His life is like a sleep that soon comes to an end, and his stay here is as temporary as the grass of the field.

Psalms 90:6. This verse continues the thought in the preceding one. As grass is permitted to live only through a day, figuratively speaking, so man’s life on the earth soon closes. This thought is expressed also in James 1:10.

Verses 7-11

Psa 90:7-11

Psalms 90:7-11

"For we are consumed in thine anger,

And in try wrath we are troubled. Thou hast set our iniquities before thee,

Our secret sins in the light of thy countenance.

For all our days are passed away in thy wrath:

We bring our years to an end as a sigh.

The days of our years are three-score years and ten,

Or even by reason of strength four-score years;

Yet is there pride, but labor and sorrow;

For it is soon gone, and we fly away.

Who knoweth the power of thine anger,

And thy wrath according to the fear that is due unto thee."

"We are consumed in thine anger" (Psalms 90:7). "Such expressions suit the time of the later wanderings in the wilderness," in which the condemned generation which God forbade to enter Canaan, "Were being gradually consumed that they might not enter the Holy Land.”

Addis observed on these verses that, "It is the sinfulness of man that makes his life so short.” Also, there is the possibility that there is a divine limitation upon human life imposed by the will of God. We have already noted the possibility that Psalms 90:10 here is a prophecy.

"Thou hast set our iniquities before thee" (Psalms 90:8). This stresses the relationship between sin and death. As Barnes noted, "The fact that human life has been made so brief, is to be explained, only upon the basis that God has arrayed before his own mind the reality of human depravity.”

"We bring our years to an end as a sigh" (Psalms 90:9). The KJV reads this, "We spend our years as a tale that is told." The implication regards the transitoriness, the fleeting nature, and the brevity of human life. "Here today, and gone tomorrow; yes I know; that is so"!

"Three-score and ten ... four-score years" (Psalms 90:10). See the chapter introduction for comments on this.

"Who knoweth the power of thine anger ... thy wrath" (Psalms 90:11). "The implication of this verse is that men do not generally take the anger and wrath of God seriously enough.” This observation is profoundly true. The current conception of God in our American society regards him as a rather over-indulgent grandfather who pays little or no attention to the crimes of blood and lust that rage beneath his very nose, assuming that his wonderful loving grace and mercy will ignore and overlook anything that wicked men may do. It is against this background of human ignorance and misconception that the ultimate appearance of Almighty God in the Judgment of the Last Day will be an occasion when, "All the tribes of the earth shall mourn over him" (Revelation 1:7).

E.M. Zerr:

Psalms 90:7. These remarks are not directed against any particular person nor concerning any specific conduct of man. They are in consideration of the general situation of mankind since the sin of our first parents. The anger and wrath of God was provoked by the first sin which was induced by Satan. Because of that event, man was cast out of the garden and doomed to be consumed and troubled by the ills of creation.

Psalms 90:8. This verse means that none of man’s actions are hidden from the Lord. Even the thoughts of the heart are seen by Him. (Hebrews 4:13.)

Psalms 90:9. The fleeting shortness of human life is still the main subject. The wrath of God refers to the first sin and the attitude that was declared by the Lord against man over it. As a result of that circumstance, the human family passes through the days of its existence as something that is being spent. Tale that is told. The first word is the only one that is in the original. It is from HEGEH and Strong defines it, "a muttering." In other words, our life is as transient as a momentary musing or meditation that ends with a sigh. I will quote from Edward Gibbon, author of the famous Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. He was a skeptic as to the Bible, but was a master of English and a truthful writer as a historian and commentator on human life. He so forcefully agrees with the inspired writer as to the shortness of this life that I wish the reader to have his statement which is as follows: "A being of the nature of man, endowed with the same faculties, but with a longer measure of existence, would cast down a smile of pity and contempt on the crimes and follies of human ambition, so eager, in a narrow span, to grasp at a precarious and short-lived enjoyment. It is thus that the experience of history exalts and enlarges the horizon of our intellectual view. In a composition of some days, in a perusal of some hours, six hundred years have rolled away, and the duration of a life or reign is contracted to a fleeting moment; the grave is ever beside the throne; the success of a criminal is almost instantly followed by the loss of his prize; and our immortal reason survives and disdains the sixty phantoms of kings who have passed before our eyes, and faintly dwell on our remembrance. The observation that, in every age and climate, ambition has prevailed with the same commanding energy, may abate the surprise of a philosopher; but while he condemns the vanity, he may search the motive, of this universal desire to obtain and hold the sceptre of dominion." Chapter 48. I trust my reader will exercise the patience to study this quotation carefully until he has grasped the meaning of its statements. The question with me is how a man who could make such an observation on the facts and then write so majestically about them, could turn away from the Sacred Text and live and die as a skeptic.

Psalms 90:10. All of the things which David says of man’s experiences pertain to his life as a human. They do not even consider, much less contradict the truths that refer to his spiritual life. The Psalmist was a great believer in God and said much about his joy and happiness in the divine service. But the frailty and uncertainty of everything that is not connected with a life for God is what is being considered generally in this and other verses. David did not make the statement here as a decree of God on the length of human life. It was rather an observation as to the rule, and the facts of history will bear out the statement of the verse.

Psalms 90:11. This verse means that man generally underestimates the full effect of God’s anger against sin. Only in proportion as men fear or respect God will they recognize and fully acknowledge the divine wrath.

Verses 12-17

Psa 90:12-17

Psalms 90:12-17

MOSES’ PRAYER

"So teach us to number our days,

That we may get us a heart of wisdom.

Hearken, O Jehovah; how long?

And let it repent thee concerning thy servants.

O satisfy us in the morning with thy lovingkindness,

That we may rejoice and be glad all our days.

Make us glad according to the days wherein thou hast afflicted us,

And the years wherein we have seen evil.

Let thy work appear unto thy servants,

And thy glory upon their children.

And let the favor of the Lord our God be upon us;

And establish thou the work of our hands upon us;

Yea, the work of our hands establish thou it."

"Teach us to number our days ... that we may get ... a heart of wisdom" (Psalms 90:12). This is a prayer that God will teach men to live as dying men should live, always taking account of the brevity and uncertainty of life and of the inevitable accounting before God in the Final Day. What a contrast is this with the attitude of many wicked people who live exactly as if they expected to live forever!

"Return ... repent thee" (Psalms 90:13). This is a plea, "For a restoration of God’s favor.” To be sure, God does not "repent" in the human sense, but when the repentance and prayers of his people permit it, God indeed will restore them to favor.

"Make us glad according to the days wherein thou hast afflicted us" (Psalms 90:15). The two clauses in this and in the second half of the verse are synonymous pleadings with God to, "Balance the evil with good things.” It is as if Moses is saying, "O God, let us at least have good times that are as long as the evil times we have suffered."

"The prevailing thought in this section is one of confidence in the Lord’s kindness and power. The psalmist knows that it is only God’s favor that renews the sense of gladness and truly prospers the works of men.”

"Let thy work appear unto thy servants, and thy glory upon their children" (Psalms 90:16). Barnes understood this to mean, "Let us see thy power displayed in removing the calamities and in restoring our days of prosperity.” It was especially a concern of Moses that the next generation of Israel (their children) would also be made aware of God’s glory.

"Let the favor of God be upon us ... establish the work of our hands" (Psalms 90:17). Those who do God’s will during their earthly pilgrimage are happy indeed. "Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord, assuredly, for they shall rest from their labors, and their work’s follow with them" (Revelation 14:13). This indicates that the works of righteous people shall indeed survive them and follow them even to the Judgment of the Great Day. This must surely be what the psalmist meant by "establish the work of our hands." How glorious is the apostolic assurance that, "We know that our labor is not in vain in the Lord" (1 Corinthians 15:58).

Alexander Maclaren has a marvelous paragraph on this with which we wish to conclude this chapter.

Fleeting as our days are, they are ennobled by our being permitted to be God’s "tools"; and although we the workers have to pass, our work may be established. That life will not die which has done the will of God. But we must walk in the favor of God, so that there can flow down from us deeds which breed not shame but shall outlast the perishable earth and follow their doers into the dwelling places of those eternal habitations.

E.M. Zerr:

Psalms 90:12. Number our days means to place the proper value on our time; if we do we will not idle it away. We will apply ourselves to those studies and activities that will make us wise and useful in matters that are profitable to all.

Psalms 90:13. This is another of the earnest supplications for divine mercy. Again we observe that no complaint is made as to the justice of the correction that has been placed on God’s people. The request is for it to be lessened through mercy.

Psalms 90:14. This is another plea for mercy and for it to come early or speedily.

Psalms 90:15. This means a request for relief that is according to the distress that had been suffered. In other words, to counteract the days of affliction with a like number of happy days.

Psalms 90:16. The writer wished the Lord to bring about the work of relief requested. He also wished it to be made so evident that not only the present generation, but the following ones could realize its existence and be led to appreciate it.

Psalms 90:17. One definition of the original for beauty is "agreeableness or delight." The prayer is that God would remove the distress of chastisement and give his servants an agreeable experience instead. It should be understood that the work of our hands means the righteous works to be performed under the mercy of God. The request is that all such works would be established or accepted by Him.

Bibliographical Information
"Commentary on Psalms 90". "Old & New Testament Restoration Commentary". https://beta.studylight.org/commentaries/eng/onr/psalms-90.html.
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